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"WKRP in Cincinnati" stars Tim Reid, Howard Hesseman and Loni Anderson and creator Hugh Wilson will celebrate the 35th anniversary of the CBS premiere – nine months late – at the Paley Center for Media in Beverly Hills on June 4.

The "Baby, If You've Ever Wondered: A WKRP in Cincinnati Reunion" panel discussion will be live streamed at 10:30 p.m. EDT (7:30 p.m. PST) at paleycenter.org.

Directors Jay Sandrich and Asaad Kelada also will reminisce with the gang.

"WKRP" premiered on CBS on Sept. 18, 1978, and aired four seasons.

The opening title scenes showed Fountain Square, Fort Washington Way, and the I-75 Brent Spence and Roebling Suspension bridges, but the sitcom was taped in Los Angeles. The old Enquirer building at 617 Vine St. was the fictional home for the radio station, in what the show called the Osgood R. Flimm building.

The comedy was derived from the sleepy family-owned station switching to top 40 rock music and hiring DJs Dr. Johnny Fever Caravella (Hesseman) and Venus Flytrap (Reid). Wilson once told the Enquirer he chose the call letters to stand for C-R-A-P. Then he picked "Cincinnati" because it sounded good with WKRP.

It seems like yesterday that Dr. Johnny Fever, Venus Flytrap and newsman Les Nessman were "living on the air in Cincinnati, Cincinnati WKRP." But "WKRP" stopped living on the air 30 years ago, when CBS repeated its last episode on Sept. 20, 1982. We've dug through our archives for some great "WKRP" photos during the show's four-year run. Yeah, we know, now you've got the "WKRP" theme song playing in your head. Sing along while you enjoy these photos! Baby, if you've ever wondered, Wondered whatever became of me. I'm living on the air in Cincinnati, Cincinnati, WKRP. Got kind of tired packing and unpacking, Town and town, up and down the dial. Maybe you and me were never meant to be, But baby, think of me once in a while. I'm at WKRP in Cincinnati
Oct. 1981: "WKRP in Cincinnati" DJs Dr. Johnny Fever (Howard Hesseman, left) and Venus Flytrap (Tim Reid, right) with public relations director Bailey Quarters (Jan Smithers) in the music library. Provided/CBS

Nov. 1978: "WKRP in Cincinnati" stars Gary Sandy (left) and Gordon Jump stop for a cold one at the Cricket Restaurant in downtown during a Cincinnati visit to promote the new CBS sitcom two months after "WKRP" premiered. Jump plays as station manager Arthur the "Big Guy" Carlson; Sandy plays program director Andy Travis. WKRP aired on CBS 1978-82. Enquirer file photo

Dec. 1979: Fired Cincinnati Reds manager Sparky Anderson guest stars as the new "WKRP in Cincinnati" sportscaster, being helped here by Bailey Quarters (Jan Smithers). The episode aired the second season, on Dec. 24, 1979. The show ended with Sparky being fired by WKRP too. Provided/CBS

March 1980: "WKRP in Cincinnati" receptionist Jennifer Marlowe (Loni Anderson) and program director Andy Travis (Gary Sandy) poses for the "Surf's Up in Cincinnati" campaign poster. They don't know the photographer also has taken nude pictures of Jennifer to sell to a men's magazine in an episode called "Filthy Pictures." Provided/CBS

Sept. 1978: "WKRP in Cincinnati" station manager Arthur Carlson (Gordon Jump, left ) complains to program director Andy Travis (Gary Sandy) that the station lost most of its advertisers after the switch to rock 'n' roll in the second episode. Provided/CBS

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Here's the announcement from the Paley Center, founded in 1975 by former CBS president William S. Paley:

"In celebration of the thirty-fifth anniversary of 'WKRP in Cincinnati's' debut season, the Paley Center gathers members of the cast and creative team for a fond look back at a true TV original.

"Fans are invited to join the conversation in real-time during the event via twitter: @PaleyCenter. Tickets are currently on sale to the general public. Further information and tickets ($25 for non-members) to the program can be found at www.paleycenter.org.

The Paley Center's public programs attract a growing community of television fans who gather to connect with the stars and creators of their favorite series during interactive panel sessions and premiere screenings. These events underscore The Paley Center for Media's ongoing commitment to increase the public's understanding of media and its growing significance in our lives through its various public and industry programs, exhibitions, and education and media preservation initiatives."